Enterprise Mobility @ SAP – Relay

This is another blog post of a series around the enterprise mobility IT team at SAP. We are an internal IT team focused on managing mobile devices, applications, and developing custom apps for SAP’s 100,000 employees. I have been a part of this team for the past six years and believe we have some unique stories, software, tools, and insights to help others in the community considering, or currently undertaking, some of the challenges which surround mobility and its adoption in the enterprise.

Introduction

As mentioned in previous posts, apps are an essential cornerstone of mobility @ SAP. Whether they are employee initiated or driven by innovation, we adopt the underlying processes and do our best to deliver solutions that increase our end users’ productivity. This post will take a deep dive into the ideation, architecture, design, and lifecycle of an internal app called Relay. A real-time chat application initially developed in 2012 using the Business Technology Platform (Previously known as the SAP Cloud Platform). A variation of the application might be familiar to some of you SAP community users, as Messages. We recently retired the application internally due to the increased adoption of MS Teams and Slack. However, I believe that some of the concepts and premise behind the application are still relevant to share. read more

Enterprise Mobility @ SAP – Mobile App Development

This is the second blog post of a series around the enterprise mobility IT team at SAP. We are an internal team focused on managing mobile devices, applications, and developing custom apps for SAP’s 100,000 employees. I have been a part of this team for the past six years. I believe we have some unique stories, software, tools, and insights to help others in the community considering, or currently undertaking, some of the challenges which surround mobility and its adoption in the enterprise.

Introduction

Apps have been a cornerstone for deploying mobile devices at SAP, and like any symbiotic relationship, the success of one depends on the success of the other. Our employees have realized the benefits of simplicity, speed, and availability in consumer applications and the power of their mobile devices. They have brought that same expectation to the enterprise and expect that these same traits be available in their work lives and daily processes. This is often how our mobile projects are initiated. In my eyes, the employees who demand innovation are the unicorns of the enterprise – they are passionate, willing, and eager to buck the norm and innovate on processes, which could be decades old, but rife for improvement. read more

Enterprise Mobility @ SAP – Introduction

This is the first blog post of a series around the enterprise mobility team at SAP. We are an internal IT team focused on managing mobile devices, mobile applications, and developing custom apps for SAP’s 100,000 employees. I have been a part of this team for the past six years and believe we have some unique stories, software, tools, and insights to help others in the community considering, or currently undertaking, some of the challenges which surround mobility and its adoption in the enterprise.

Introduction

SAP has been on the leading edge of adopting, deploying, and developing its Enterprise Mobility strategy for over ten years. It was one of the initial early adopters of Apple in the enterprise, with a field deployment of over 11,000 iPads in 2011. At the time, it was the second-largest deployment worldwide. Not only did SAP deploy and encourage the adoption of these innovative devices in our employee’s hands, but the team also had a early start on developing native iOS apps to support and empower our employees in their daily lives, enabling them to be more productive anywhere. read more

2018 SAP TechEd Live Interview

I had a nice Live Studio interview with Britt Womelsdorf at the 2018 SAP TechEd event chatting about the SAP Cloud Platform SDK’s. Check it out here:

(The video has since been taken down, but here are a few photos).

iOS App: iMessage App – Stick Figure Family

This was my first foray into iMessage Apps, and while extremely basic, was pretty fun to develop and deploy. Check it out in the App Store.

Description:
Stick Figs for iMessage let you add a variety of different stick figures representing you, your family and your pets. Use the sticks to add context to images and text you share with your friends and family, giving your messages and photos a personalized touch, and showing you care about your family. This collection has over 30 different variations for all occasions.

DevOps/CI/CD for SAP HANA

DevOps, and particularly Continuous integration (CI) and continuous delivery (CD), are terms which has been adopted widely and over the past few years in the software development industry. It’s use is currently creeping outside the scope of development and into various departments wanting to decrease long delivery cycles and increase product iteration. For those unfamiliar with the terms in the software space, or premise behind the idea: CI/CD is essentially the automation of the delivery of your software development projects into production and the broader goal is to bring Development and Operations closer together. In this blog we will mainly focus on CD as it pertains to HANA XS development.

Inside SAP IT, and like a lot of other IT departments, we are trying to increase and simplify the deployment of our HANA XS projects and move to a more agile approach in delivering solutions for our internal customers.

Firstly, some background: As many of the XS Developers out there know, the HANA repo is not necessarily the easiest “file system” to work with. The fact that data is stored in the DB, in a propriety format and each file needs to be activated, makes it tough to automate basic operations like moving or copying. In order to work around this topic, we decided that all of our code deployments were going to be done using HANA’s preferred native “packaged” file type known as delivery units (DU). These contain the entire active code base of a project (or subset of a project), changed as well as unchanged files.

In the past we manually deployed code to each of our instances individually, this required manual intervention and developer/operations availability which we hoped we could streamline. The DU import process we decided to use is a feature which was introduced in SPS09 through a command line tool called HDBALM. This allows any PC which has the HANA client installed to import packages and delivery units to a HANA server. While there are options to commit and activate individual files from a traditional file system folder system (using the FILE API), we felt the benefits of a DU were better suited to our use case (for example, hdb* objects which may need to be created in specific order).

Since we have the ability to deploy our code to our various servers using HDBALM, we needed something to get the job done! We used our internal instance of Atlassian Bamboo. We use this server for our HCP HTML5 and Java apps which make it a logical choice to keep our projects grouped to together. Our build agents are redhat distros and have the HANA client installed. We also copy over the SSL cert since our hana servers are using https and these are needed for hdbalm.

In this case, and example, our landscape is relatively simple with a Dev, Test and Production dedicated HANA HCP instances.

Screen Shot 2016-03-14 at 8.52.56 PM.png

We store our “ready for deployment” delivery unit on our Internal Github instance, we do this so that the file is version controlled and also visible and accessible to our dev team. The premise is that the dev team would push a version of a delivery unit after their sprint, and its ready for deployment to Test. This could easily be a file system as well. However, we like to use the push/tag/release of our Github repo to trigger the build deployment.

FYI: Bamboo is a great tool and a nearly zero cost barrier ($10). If you are considering a build server which has a quick and easy installation (*nix) and setup, I would highly recommend it.

Since we have gone through some of the logical details, here are some technical details covering the topic:

As mentioned previously, our build process is trigged by a new delivery unit being committed to our github repo. Our bamboo build agent picks the build up, saves it on the build server and deploys it to our Test instance. A email is sent to our dev and test team with the results. Before the import process, we check the version identifier on the existing delivery unit which was on the server, and we subsequently check it again after the import for comparisons and decide if the import was successful (along with the results of the import statement)

(Keep in mind the below commands include $bamboo_variables) but would work just fine to replace them with actual values.

You can find the code here in a github gist (where it will be maintained)

export HDBALM_PASSWD="$bamboo_DestXSPassword" export https_proxy=http://proxy.wdf.sap.corp:8080 echo " " echo " " echo " " preversion="$(/home/i847772/sap/hdbclient/hdbalm -s -y -h $bamboo_DestHostname -p $bamboo_DestHostPort -u $bamboo_DestXSUsername -c $bamboo_DestSSLCert du get $bamboo_DeliveryUnitName $bamboo_DeliveryUnitVendor)" if [[ $preversion == "" ]]; then echo "Initial install of the DU"; preinstallversion="0.0.0" else preinstallversion=$(echo $preversion | grep -Po '(?<=version:)[^r]+' | xargs) fi echo "Pre Install version: $preinstallversion" IMPORT_LOG="$(/home/i847772/sap/hdbclient/hdbalm -s -y -j -h $bamboo_DestHostname -p $bamboo_DestHostPort -u $bamboo_DestXSUsername -c $bamboo_DestSSLCert import "$bamboo_DeliveryUnitFilename")" postversion="$(/home/i847772/sap/hdbclient/hdbalm -s -y -h $bamboo_DestHostname -p $bamboo_DestHostPort -u $bamboo_DestXSUsername -c $bamboo_DestSSLCert du get $bamboo_DeliveryUnitName $bamboo_DeliveryUnitVendor)" if [[ $postversion == "" ]]; then echo "Unable to query installed delivery unit version" postinstallversion="-1" else postinstallversion=$(echo $postversion | grep -Po '(?<=version:)[^r]+' | xargs) fi echo "Post Install version: $postinstallversion" export HDBALM_PASSWD="" LOG="${IMPORT_LOG##* }" if grep -q "Successfully imported delivery units" $LOG && [[ $postinstallversion == $preinstallversion ]]; then echo " " echo " " echo "******************************************************* Import of the DU completed, but the version has not changed *******************************************************" echo " " echo "Its possible you have not incremented the version numbers" echo " " echo "******************************************************* Log File $LOG *******************************************************" echo " " echo " " if [ $LOG != "" ]; then cat $LOG else echo "No log file, ensure the job is running on a machine with HDBALM" fi echo " " echo " " echo "******************************************************* //Log File *****************************************************" echo " " echo " " exit 0 elif [ $postinstallversion == "-1" ]; then echo " " echo " " echo "******************************************************* Import of the DU Has failed *******************************************************" echo " " echo "******************************************************* Log File *******************************************************" echo " " echo " " if [ $LOG != "" ]; then cat $LOG else echo "No log file, ensure the job is running on a machine with HDBALM" fi echo " " echo " " echo "******************************************************* //Log File *****************************************************" echo " " echo " " exit 1 else echo " " echo " " echo "******************************************************* Import of the DU has completed successfully *******************************************************" echo " " echo "Installation successful" echo " " echo " " exit 0 fi exit 0 read more

Developing SAP HANA XS Web Applications – TechTarget

Summary:

Developing HANA applications is a task split evenly between web, database and UI/UX Developers. This article outlines some helpful and useful tools for all 3 of the tasks when companies take on the challenge of HANA web app development.

Upon release of HANA SPS05, SAP introduced a great new feature called HANA Extended Services (Also known as the XS Engine). The concept was to embed a fully featured web server within the SAP HANA appliance. Not only was it a web server, but it also provided development tools and an application server. One core difference between traditional web servers and the XS Engine, is that it has the ability to execute SQL using the exposed core API’s using Server side Javascript (XSJS). Thus making accessing and modifying your database artifacts very simple and straight forward. With the SPS08 release of HANA, the XS Engine has come a long way and with the additional features, improved stability and the core performance increased, giving us an encouraging sign of a mature product. read more

Migrating a BTP MaxDB Database to SAP Hana

Overview: This blog describes migrating a simple MaxDB database from HCP to a dedicated HCP HANA instance. Also has some details around a open source tool called XSImport – a free, open source native XS app for importing CSV files into HANA.

HCPMaxDBtoHANA.png

In the Enterprise Mobility team at SAP we are currently working on an exciting project migrating one of our existing applications to a HANA backend, while going through a major code rewrite. During this process, I had the task of migrating a HCP based MaxDB over to a dedicated HCP HANA DB. The dataset I was working with was not particularly large (@1.3 GB) with the majority of the data residing in just a few tables. (For reference this is a standalone Java HCP app). Since remote tunnel access to production HCP Databases is not available, the only way to get the raw data was through a HCP ticket, the support team were helpful and responsive, and after a couple of hours I had my exported dataset. read more

Open Source Project: XSImport – a HANA app for importing CSV’s

XSImport.jpg

During a recent small migration project from a HCP MaxDB DB to a HCP HANA DB I needed to import multiple CSV files, and go through a series of dry runs during the process. Since I was going to be doing the loads multiple times, I decided it would be helpful to write a small front end to make the processes of uploading failrly large CSV files into HANA simpler.

Over the past few months I have heard the question: “Whats the best way to get data into HANA from CSV?” While there are a few options if you have a HANA appliance and system level access to the system, there are not too many options with a HCP instance. After trying/testing the CSV import from Studio (size limit), a hdbti file (not great for multiple/repetitive options/file size challenges) it does not leave you with too many choices. After doing some digging it seems quite a few people have uploaded data through a server side script (XSJS) successfully and using the BATCH option while processing is pretty fast. read more